Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine Recommended for all adults by the WHO group

A nurse draws the Covid-19 vaccine from AstraZeneca Plc and Oxford University.

Photographer: Anthony Devlin / Bloomberg

A World Health Organization panel is recommended AstraZeneca Plc’s Covid-19 vaccine for all adults over the age of 18, paving the way for accelerating inoculations in developing countries.

The recommendation may encourage more countries to use the vaccine widely, after some members of the European Union advised against giving it to the elderly due to insufficient test data. The effect of the shot on older people is expected to be the same as on younger recipients, according to Alejandro Cravioto, chair of the WHO Group of Experts on Strategic Advisors on Immunization.

The decision is good news for developing countries, many of which are waiting to administer the first shots, as richer countries have already inoculated millions of residents. AstraZeneca, which developed the vaccine with Oxford University, has promised significant supplies to Covax, a facility that aims to distribute vaccines equitably around the world.

The WHO recommendation on the shooting of Astra follows the decision of the organization to eliminate a vaccine from Pfizer Inc. and BioNTech SE in December. The feature of the UK drug maker is easier to implement than other vaccines like Pfizer, which have to be stored at extremely cold temperatures and cost less.

Astra inoculation is most effective when the second dose is given later, according to the group, which recommended 8 to 12 weeks between doses. The United Kingdom has adopted a similar dosing range, which is larger than the recommended gap for some other two-shot vaccines.

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